
Chartreuse Columbine
Columbine flower meaning centers on foolishness and whimsy in most Victorian flower dictionaries, a fitting label for a bloom that looks like nothing else in an English garden. Our Chartreuse Columbine keeps that spurred, slightly chaotic shape intact — the flower that seems to split the difference between a rose and a daisy and land somewhere stranger than either. Real columbine blooms for a few weeks each spring before the foliage takes over and the flower disappears from view entirely. Ceramic keeps that same complicated silhouette visible year-round, no dieback, no foliage overtaking the bloom. Hang it solo in a cottage-style entryway or cluster it among warmer greens from the collection for a display that reads gathered rather than planted. Artisans shape these pieces by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, working each spur individually before the chartreuse glaze goes on. Chive pieces are carried by the Norfolk Botanical Garden gift shop, chosen for a shape botanical staff apparently find genuinely hard to walk past.
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Chartreuse Columbine
Columbine flower meaning centers on foolishness and whimsy in most Victorian flower dictionaries, a fitting label for a bloom that looks like nothing else in an English garden. Our Chartreuse Columbine keeps that spurred, slightly chaotic shape intact — the flower that seems to split the difference between a rose and a daisy and land somewhere stranger than either. Real columbine blooms for a few weeks each spring before the foliage takes over and the flower disappears from view entirely. Ceramic keeps that same complicated silhouette visible year-round, no dieback, no foliage overtaking the bloom. Hang it solo in a cottage-style entryway or cluster it among warmer greens from the collection for a display that reads gathered rather than planted. Artisans shape these pieces by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, working each spur individually before the chartreuse glaze goes on. Chive pieces are carried by the Norfolk Botanical Garden gift shop, chosen for a shape botanical staff apparently find genuinely hard to walk past.
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Description
Columbine flower meaning centers on foolishness and whimsy in most Victorian flower dictionaries, a fitting label for a bloom that looks like nothing else in an English garden. Our Chartreuse Columbine keeps that spurred, slightly chaotic shape intact — the flower that seems to split the difference between a rose and a daisy and land somewhere stranger than either. Real columbine blooms for a few weeks each spring before the foliage takes over and the flower disappears from view entirely. Ceramic keeps that same complicated silhouette visible year-round, no dieback, no foliage overtaking the bloom. Hang it solo in a cottage-style entryway or cluster it among warmer greens from the collection for a display that reads gathered rather than planted. Artisans shape these pieces by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, working each spur individually before the chartreuse glaze goes on. Chive pieces are carried by the Norfolk Botanical Garden gift shop, chosen for a shape botanical staff apparently find genuinely hard to walk past.
























